Hi! I read posts telling me that NULL values are considered greater than non-null values. Fine. Is there a way to explicitly reverse this?
I have the situation where a table holds IP-addresses. The table has column of type timestamp, called assignedAt, which tells when the address was assigned to a computer in our network. What I'd like to do, is to get an IP-address that hasn't yet been assigned to anyone, or the one with the smallest assignedAt (most likely to not be in use). CREATE TABLE IPv4Address ( id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY, address INET NOT NULL UNIQUE, assignedAt TIMESTAMP ); The query to use would be, SELECT ip.id FROM IPv4Address ip ORDER BY assignedAt ASC LIMIT 1; with the exception that this returns rows with NULL at the end, instead of at the beginning which is what I'd like. How do achieve this with one query? I'm using Postgres 7.4. And oh, I'm not on the list so please cc my adress in any replies! Thanks in advance, Fredrik Wendt ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command (send "unregister YourEmailAddressHere" to [EMAIL PROTECTED])